Here’s an easy, step‑by‑step way to draw a volleyball, plus a blog‑style structure that fits your “Quick Scoop” post idea.

How to Draw a Volleyball Easy

Quick Scoop

If you can draw a circle and a few curved lines, you can draw a clean, recognizable volleyball. This works great for kids, beginners, or a simple graphic for posters and school projects.

Step‑by‑step: Simple Volleyball (Beginner Friendly)

1. Start with a circle

  • Lightly sketch a big circle in the middle of your page.
  • Use a round object (cup, tape roll, small plate) if you want it really smooth.
  • Keep the line light so you can erase later.

2. Find the center

  • Put a tiny dot roughly in the middle of the circle.
  • It doesn’t have to be perfect; it’s just a guide for your panel lines.

3. Divide the ball into three “pizza” slices

  • From the center dot, draw three straight, lightly‑sketched lines out to the edge of the circle.
  • Space them like a peace sign (roughly 120° apart) so you end up with three big slices.
  • These are only guides and will be erased later.

4. Turn straight lines into curved seams

Now you’ll turn those straight guides into the classic volleyball pattern.

  1. In each of the three slices, draw one curved line from the center toward the edge, running alongside a straight guide line.
  2. Make sure each curve gently follows the round shape of the circle so it feels like it wraps around the ball.
  3. You should now see three curved “bands” radiating from the center toward the edge.

5. Add extra curved lines to finish the panels

  • In each slice, add two more curved lines that follow the same curve as the first one.
  • You’ll end up with three bands, each made up of three curved strips.
  • Check that the curves feel smooth and evenly spaced; adjust lightly with your pencil.

6. Clean up construction lines

  • Carefully erase the straight “pizza slice” lines and the little center dot.
  • Keep only the outer circle and the curved seams you want.
  • Darken the remaining lines slightly so your volleyball stands out.

7. Ground the ball (optional but recommended)

To make it look like it’s on a court, not floating:

  • Draw a straight floor line behind the ball, from one side of the page to the other, stopping when it touches the ball on both sides.
  • You can also draw a small oval shadow under the ball if it’s “in the air”.

8. Add shading for a 3D look (optional)

  • Pick a light source (for example, top left).
  • On the opposite side (bottom right), lightly shade the panels.
  • Darken just next to each seam line so the seams look slightly tucked into the ball.
  • Blend gently with your finger or a blending stump to soften the shading.

9. Personalize it

  • Write a team name or logo on one of the panels (e.g., “EAGLES” or “BEACH CUP”).
  • Add a simple background:
    • A net behind the ball.
    • Court lines.
    • Sand texture if you want a beach feel.

Quick Mini‑Guide Version

If you just want a fast reminder:

  1. Draw or trace a circle.
  2. Put a small dot near the center.
  3. Draw three straight lines from the dot to the edge (like a peace sign).
  4. Replace each straight line with a smooth curved line that follows the circle.
  5. Add more curved lines in each section to form panels.
  6. Erase the straight guides and center dot.
  7. Darken the volleyball lines, add floor/shadow, and shade if you like.

Example “Quick Scoop” Meta Description (SEO‑friendly)

“How to draw a volleyball easy: learn a super simple, step‑by‑step method using just a circle and a few curved lines. Perfect for beginners, kids, and quick sports doodles.”

Simple HTML Table Snippet (as requested)

You mentioned returning tables as HTML, so here’s a small one you can paste into your post:

html

<table>
  <thead>
    <tr>
      <th>Step</th>
      <th>Action</th>
      <th>Tip</th>
    </tr>
  </thead>
  <tbody>
    <tr>
      <td>1</td>
      <td>Draw a light circle.</td>
      <td>Use a cup or small plate to trace.</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <td>2</td>
      <td>Add a small center dot.</td>
      <td>It’s only a guide, keep it tiny.</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <td>3</td>
      <td>Draw 3 straight lines from center to edge.</td>
      <td>Think of a peace sign or 3 pizza slices.</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <td>4</td>
      <td>Replace straight lines with curved seams.</td>
      <td>Follow the curve of the circle.</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <td>5</td>
      <td>Add extra curved lines in each section.</td>
      <td>Keep spacing even for a clean look.</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <td>6</td>
      <td>Erase guides and darken final lines.</td>
      <td>Only the circle and seams should remain.</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
      <td>7</td>
      <td>Add floor line, shadow, and shading.</td>
      <td>Shade opposite your light source for 3D effect.</td>
    </tr>
  </tbody>
</table>

Bottom note:
Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.